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Rep. Brad Sherman (D-Calif.) introduced an article of impeachment against President Trump that accuses him of obstructing justice.
Hot Damn! House Democrat Files Article Of Impeachment Against Trump
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Rep. Brad Sherman (D-Calif.) introduced an article of impeachment against President Trump that accuses him of obstructing justice.
Hot Damn! House Democrat Files Article Of Impeachment Against Trump
Posted in Celebrities, Hollywood, Hot Stuff, News
Tagged bra, celeb news, espys, jaws, michelle, national, News, our-souls, president-trump, stunning-moment
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In a stunning moment that snatched our souls, edges and hearts, former forever FLOTUS Michelle Obama showed up to the ESPYs Wednesday in a stunning bodycon dress. Excuse us; we are still picking our jaws up from the ground. Obama took a break from living her best “out of the public eye” life to honor […]
Michelle Obama Just Snatched Our Collective Heart By Showing Up To The ESPYs Like This
Posted in Celebrities, Hollywood, Hot Stuff, News
Tagged celeb news, espys, jaws, michelle, News, our-souls, stunning-moment, wednesday
Blac Chyna Responds To Tyga’s Disses Remember when we told you that Tyga and Amber Rose had a not so subtle shade fest about Blac Chyna buying an Audi instead of that “leased” Ferrari like Kylie Jenner’s? Well Chyna is clapping back at her ex via an Instagram video and a line from Drake’s Meek Mill diss. Early Saturday Chyna took to IG to post a video of herself listening to Drake’s “Back To Back” with the line “Shoutout to the boss b****s wifing n***s” on repeat—a shot at Tyga and his 18-year-old girlfriend. She also added THIS from the viral “Why You Lying” vine: Oop! What do YOU think about Chyna clapping back at Tyga??? Hit the flip for more.
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Hi Hater: Here’s How Blac Chyna Responded To Tyga’s Ferrari Disses To Her & Amber Rose…
Posted in Celebrities, Hollywood, Hot Stuff
Tagged amber, amber-chyna, chyna, Hollywood, instagram, instagram-photo, jaws, matter-how, shot-at-tyga
Crocodiles truly are fearless: they will take on anything they can get their jaws around, no matter how small or large. Watch what happens to this lion as he attempts to cross South Africa’s Sabie River, which is teeming with hungry crocs!
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Run For Ya Life!: Croc Shows Lion Who’s Boss In His Hood [Video]
Posted in Celebrities, Hollywood, Hot Stuff
Tagged afktravel, external, hungry-crocs, jaws, lion, matter-how, News, sabie, sabie-river, small-or-large, south, south-africa, stars, their-jaws
As the Internet’s resident Nina Agdal expert, I can tell you that we’ve seen hotter photoshoots than this from my #1 favorite hottie, but not by much. Because Nina’s looking so good in these latest pictures, I’m going to need the jaws of life to cut me out of my sweatpants after this. Yow. » view all 21 photos
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Nina Agdal’s Sexy New Photoshoot Is Awesome
Posted in Celebrities, Hot Stuff
Tagged agdal-pictures, celeb, celeb news, Hollywood, hollywood-star, jaws, need-the-jaws, nina agdal, Pictures, riquelle, star news, stars, sweatpants, TMZ
New in theaters, Charisma Carpenter stars in The Expendables 2. Charisma keeps covered in this testosterone-fueled action flick, so check out her bare butt in Flirting with Danger (2006) instead. Nude on Blu-ray, Susan Backlinie bares boobs, bush and heinie as a skinny dipper in Jaws (1975) , and HBO’s True Blood gets sticky with bloody full frontal from Jessica Clark .
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Extend and Expend with The Expendables 2 Star Charisma Carpenter
Posted in Celebrities, Hot Stuff, Sex
Tagged action-flick, expendables, full-frontal, Hbo, jaws, keeps-covered, missing, TMZ, true-blood
It’s so hard to find a reasonably enjoyable thriller these days that anything with a marginally intriguing premise and fewer than 10 plot holes has come to seem like a minor miracle. Man on a Ledge might have been that kind of modest miracle: Sam Worthington stars as Nick Cassidy, a pissed-off ex-cop who’s been convicted of a crime he didn’t commit. Somehow – and the whole of Man on a Ledge deals with the whys and wherefores of that somehow – he springs himself from Sing Sing, suits up in some phenomenally nice-looking threads, and checks himself (under an assumed name) into a room on one of the upper floors of a midtown Manhattan luxury hotel. After a room-service breakfast of champagne, lobster and French fries, he creeps out onto the ledge and greets the cops who respond to the call with some very specific demands. Chief among those requirements is that he’ll speak with only one NYPD psychologist, Lydia Spencer (Elizabeth Banks). Spencer has been having a rough time on the force of late: When we first see her, she’s barely able to rouse herself from her bed – she’s having some sort of killer morning after, and her messy tumble of blond hair makes her look like a discarded Barbie doll. Cassidy, of course, has specific reasons for wanting to speak with Spencer. And even if he makes her day tougher than it was at the beginning, it’s clear from the way her superiors order her around – they include a sarcastic nutbuster played by Edward Burns and Titus Welliver as an overly caricatured, gum-chewing NYPD bossy-pants – that they don’t take her as seriously as Cassidy does. Somewhere in there, Jamie Bell and Genesis Rodriguez sneak around as part of a carefully orchestrated plan to… well, to tell you too much would give the game away, but it involves a giant honker of a diamond that Cassidy supposedly stole from a loathsome Donald Trump type (played with great relish by Ed Harris, who usually gets to portray only principled guys). Meanwhile, Cassidy’s close friend and former partner (played by Anthony Mackie), frets about Cassidy’s fate. Because Cassidy is, after all, clinging somewhat daintily to a narrow strip of stone some 20 stories off the ground: This is a guy who doesn’t care if he lives or dies as long as he ultimately proves his innocence. And as you watch Man on a Ledge , you’ll have good cause to wonder why he’s going to such extremes. Director Asger Leth (son of Danish filmmaker Jørgen Leth and also the director of the 2006 documentary Ghosts of Cit
Posted in Celebrities, Gossip, Hollywood, Hot Stuff, News
Tagged anthony-mackie, australian, celeb news, films, french, history, jaws, ledge, mma, psych, review, the grey, wedding
Joe Carnahan ’s thriller The Grey , currently receiving kudos for its blend of red-blooded action and considered existentialism, tells the fictional tale of a group of oilrig workers who survive a plane crash only to be hunted by wolves in the wild. Among the ragtag band of comrades facing off against nature under Liam Neeson ’s steady leadership is Dermot Mulroney’s Talget, who, like the others, learns to shed his protective layers and confront his own fears when forced to face off directly with Mother Nature. For Mulroney, The Grey represents a kind of muscular, male-driven pic that no longer gets made often enough. In a conversation ranging from the film’s throwback sense of masculinity to his reasons for joining Carnahan & Co. on the unusually brutal shoot (the cast and crew filmed in snowy, sub-zero conditions for months in Canada), Mulroney spoke candidly about how much the landscape has changed for him as an actor since he burst on the scene in the ‘80s, why he was happy to be in a film with no women, and how his first time on the other side of the camera (directing last year’s Love, Wedding, Marriage , which he describes as “a badly made movie”) turned him away from directing, at least for the time being. Liam Neeson aside, you’re probably the most recognizable cast member in The Grey even though you’ve been hidden under layers of clothing and those glasses. How much consideration went into the conception of how your character looks ? I can’t say that wasn’t deliberate but that wasn’t necessarily my idea. It was in conjunction discussing it with the director, Joe [Carnahan], who saw my character as someone who has kind of receded under his protective layers whether it’s the hat and the glasses and the beard and the scarf and all this, and then slowly as the movie progresses some of those layers come off. I hope that we pulled that off. That was his goal; he was so specific with character. What appealed to you about joining this ensemble pic and working with Joe Carnahan? But even from his screenplay, really, is what hooked me, and obviously the opportunity to work with him and Liam. You know, I love to work – I still love to work – and I’d go anywhere for something good like this. It turns out I was going to northern British Colombia in sub-zero temperatures and blizzard conditions… It seems like it was an unusually extreme scenario for a film shoot! But your cast mates have described Joe as having picked a disparate group of actors who somehow shared a specific quality, a like-mindedness about the project, that made it all worthwhile . Very much so. I don’t know what it is that Joe has to be able to do that, but my understanding is that he’s done that with all of his films – he’s handpicked people that have something, as you say, other than the fact that they were right for the part. They’re also the right man that he wants to have on the experience. He wants to experience . What Joe Carnahan loves to do more than anything at all is shoot a movie, so he wants to do it with people that are also going to enjoy it and make it more enjoyable for him. So he’s not just picking actors, he’s kind of picking future friends. Were you acquainted before the film? I’d never met him before! I walk in to audition and I can tell he’s a helluva guy and that I would enjoy his company – but I think he’s actually casting for that as well. He’s casting not only for the film, but for the steak dinners after work, you know? In a way, he was. And really what I’m describing is his ability to intuitively “get” what people would have to offer, and the thing that he was determined to achieve was to get guys who were willing and able. You know, as actors we’re of course all willing, but I don’t think all of them would’ve been able to take on those extreme conditions. I couldn’t believe that you all went into those freezing climes to shoot; word is Joe got frostbite out there at one point. I know Dallas [Roberts] got frostbit on the nose, and I think Joe Anderson got some fingertips… this is, like, angry cold. This is all-the-way cold! But as an actor, your body – your fingertips, your nose – is your livelihood! That seems like a risk to take for a film. Oh, I hadn’t even thought of that! I didn’t suffer any ill effects from the cold. [Laughs] I have good circulation, so… and everybody else handled it great, too. It certainly was never life-threatening, but it never occurred to me that it might somehow affect my ability to make a living. So when you signed on to The Grey , you were signing on not only to a film but to having an extraordinary experience . We were signing on not only to an extraordinary experience but to risk, but a lot of guys would have. These were parts that a lot of people wanted, for the quality, for the personnel, for the content, but also the same as Joe – for the experience of getting to do something like this. I’ve done a lot of movies on stages, and sets, in a house, around a dining room table, sitting in a thing, going to the dance, all that – wonderful. But how often does somebody say, ‘Hey – do you want to go up further than you’ve ever been and stand around in the cold with me for a couple of months?’ For me, I had just come from a movie called Big Miracle which comes out next month where there, too, we were shooting in Anchorage, Alaska and it was cold and dark. I’m guessing Drew Barrymore did not get frostbite on her nose. She did not get frostbite, but she did get in freezing cold water! In a wetsuit, for real – she did it all. Nobody complained and nobody got hurt, and even Kristen Bell, who’s as big as this, pulled off standing around all day in zero degree temperatures. Looking at the themes in The Grey , we’re in an era where metrosexuality has become a thing and more masculine stories and themes are something of another generation. The characters, not just Liam’s but all of them, are different shades of… Grey? Yes, in many respects. But moreso these guys seem to represent a spectrum of what it means to be a man, or to come to terms with your own masculinity and mortality, when faced with this kind of life or death situation. I think that’s a wonderful diagram of the film. I hadn’t quite tapped into that myself. If I were to try to get to the bottom of what character I was playing, my idea for Talget was that he’s the mother of the group. He’s the little old lady with the babushka and the thing and ‘Come on,’ because they already have a natural leader or father type, they already have a hotheaded adolescent with Diaz, and they have a knowledgeable wise grandparent type with Henrik. Where’s the mother? So I kind of filled that slot. That doesn’t answer your masculinity question because I’d much rather be accused of being testosterone-fueled than being a little old lady, but by the same token if you’re looking at each of these characters as a facet of what manhood is, then part of what manhood is, is your mother. But that’s okay! It’s only when these guys strip away their machismo that they are able to be emotionally honest with each other. Right. [Pause] There a couple of scenes in Jaws when the shark goes out of the movie, and you don’t really get a great look at that shark anyhow, much like this movie. But then they’re sitting in that boat and they’re just talking, and Shaw goes into this whole thing about the Indianapolis and it’s this incredible moment, an historical moment in the history of our cinema. So you say this movie has some throwback qualities, or some old school manly-man qualities; that’s intentional. That’s the kind of movie Joe wants to make. Joe is one of those guys. So, guilty as charged on that; if that’s something that needs to be brought back, then let’s bring it back. It seems like people are responding to that about this movie and to my mind there haven’t been enough of them. The pendulum swung the other way since I started in this business and there were men’s movies like whatever those Tom Cruise movies… The meaty ‘80s, yes. Yeah. And then all of a sudden Sigourney Weaver comes in the Alien and we have strong women, we have Working Girl , we have all this, we have Best Friend’s Wedding , and before you know it, all the fucking movies are about the girls! Do you really think so? I do! I do. The ones that I was asked to be in, for certain. All of them. So that’s kind of what I did for a while, and every once in a while I’d get this sweet relief of being in a movie like [ The Grey ], where there are no girls in it, there are no women in it – Nobody vying for your affections… Nobody’s vying for anybody’s affections in this movie, that’s right. [Laughs] That’s one relief right there. Aren’t we kind of tired of the vying for affection in the American cinema? Well, let me ask you this — [Laughs] I know, it’s tough because “wry” doesn’t really come across in print, but you put that on the website and we’ll see how that flies. “Too many ladies in the movies for a while there.” No! I think it’s interesting you say this, given your directorial debut, Love, Wedding, Marriage . Yeah, and it couldn’t be a more womanly movie, right? Let’s skip it. Change the topic. I am interested in your directing impulses… I’m not, so much. Did you get it all out in that one film? No, it just didn’t go very well. If I ever tried again I’d do it alarmingly differently. Why so? I don’t even want to talk about that movie, to be honest with you. I don’t think it’s a very clean segue, either, from masculine guy in The Grey to director of a badly made movie. It’s only that the types of movies that they are, are interesting in juxtaposition. I like movies like The Grey to view and to act in a lot more than I like movies like that. The Grey is in theaters Friday. Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .
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Dermot Mulroney on Joe Carnahan and the ‘Sweet Relief’ of Being in a Manly Movie like The Grey
You probably already know it’s Shark Week – all week, Skin Central has been bombarded with Facebook updates from well-meaning internet friends reminding us that “IT’S MOTHAFUCKIN SHARK WEEK, BITCHES!” (that’s an exact quote, by the way). And while cold-blooded killing machines are undoubtedly cool, Skin Central prefers warm-blooded sperm-killing machines like Susan Backlinie , who lost her shirt before losing a limb to the tit-ular great white in Jaws (1975): Or Jacqueline Bisset , who double-breastedly started the wet t-shirt craze with her fully erect dairy dials in The Deep (1977). You’ll be growing faster than the voracious mega-shark when you see Jenny McShane ‘s floatation devices in the cult classic Shark Attack 3: Megalodon (2002). And Mexico has actually produced a skinpressive array of shark-attack flicks to tickle your tequila worm, like the wall-to-wall nudes of Tintorera (1977)… and the equally rude, crude and nude Carnada (1980). Speaking of Mexico, Eleonora Vallone ‘s Triple-B underwater sex scene in that film is sure to keep your hand moving South of the Border! For more bikini babes and the carnivorous creatures who love (to eat) them, check out wet n’ wild titles like Shark Night 3D , Spring Break Shark Attack , Sharktopus , and of course the Anatomy Award-winning Piranha 3D right here at MrSkin.com!
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Sink Your Teeth into Shark Week, Mr. Skin Style [PICS]
Posted in Celebrities, Hot Stuff, Sex
Tagged bennyhollywood, bianca kajlich, border, carnivorous, check-out-wet, jaws, kajlich, mr skin minute, rack-flash, stars
Filed under: Tom Brady , TMZ Sports New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady was involved in a car accident this morning in Boston …
Posted in Celebrities, Gossip, Hot Stuff
Tagged Boston, celeb news, Crash, jaws, stars, tmz sports, tmzsports